Results 21 to 40 of 325 for stemmed:chair
The chair is an identity, and yet at no given moment is it the same chair, for already the atoms and molecules that compose it have changed, and been replaced by others. [...]
[...] Each individual, creating, say, his version of any given chair, uses entirely different atoms and molecules in his subconscious construction of it.
[...] Nevertheless, for all the appearance of permanence and rigidity, your chair is only a chair by virtue of your own concept—gestalt, that is in itself severely limited due to the limitations of outer senses. [...]
[...] He supposes that when he does not see a chair the chair does not exist; and my dear friends, the boy in this case is smarter than the man.
(“What if the boy closes his eyes but touches the chair?”)
[...] If his father, for example, sees the chair that the boy does not see, then the object exists as a thing to be seen in the father’s self-perspective. [...]
You are stressing perhaps too strongly the aspects of the chair, as the binding elements that hold your figure more or less stationary. He, of course also creates the chair, as you know, and therefore the limitations. [...]
[...] Remember that the soul is plain behind the facade that you see — that even the body is in a constant state of almost magical activity, even though as you paint it in its chair, it is physically motionless.
(I decided to rebuild it, so Saturday morning I went to the lumber yard for the supplies, and spent the day doing the work, including cutting down the chair even more. [...] The new chair worked much better, but Jane had trouble keeping the cushion in place. [...]
(Frank had an idea about placing one of our old chairs on rollers so Jane could be wheeled right beside the john to slide over onto it while she was having walking difficulties. [...]
This is highly amusing, for he did not want to have a chair available for the owner of the second gallery. [...] To prove to himself that this indeed was not the case, he began a nervous, frenzied and altogether desperate attempt to make certain that enough chairs were available.
[...] Following this, reacting rather typically as a woman, he discovered that he did not believe enough good chairs were available.
He was quite correct in assuming as he did that his upset had little to do with a lack of chairs, since he knew perfectly well that a sufficiency was available. [...]
[...] I thought this referred to the large round light over the dental chair, but it could also refer to many other things.
“You, Joseph, perceive Mark sitting in the chair,” Seth continued. “He sits in his own chair which he has constructed in his own space continuum and personal perspective.
[...] By physical universe I mean everything with which we come into contact in any way at all—stars, chairs, events, rocks, flowers—our entire physical experience. [...]
[...] She’s been doing very well with the new chair in the bathroom, and is now going to the john three times a day. [When I remarked that I’d like to see her up her trips to four times a day, she at once became defensive, so I cooled it.] I followed her advice and sprayed the linoleum-covered chair seat with furniture polish to make it more slippery, so that she can more easily slide sideways from the chair onto the couch or john. [...]
1. According to the Seth Material, one chair is perceived by 5 people as
The situation frightened him of course further, and you, so for the winter he largely sat in one chair in one room. This chair (indicated), being used to get from room to room, was at that point creative, and it got him involved in the household again, and greatly added to the exercise given the legs over the entire day, for sometimes he walked to the bathroom three times in the winter, but for the rest of the day his motion was most limited.
The dream locations are not superimposed upon the chest and bed and chair. They exist composed of the very atoms and molecules that in the waking state you perceive as bed and chest and chair.
[...] We also moved about later in the session, but Jane kept using her favorite session chair, our Kennedy rocker.
In the first place, the chest and bed and chair are only the results of your perception, and of your physical perception. [...]
[...] Yet while you dream you cannot find the bed nor chest nor chair, and when you wake you cannot find the room or city or location which was there moments before.
(She was sitting opposite my table in a wicker chair as 9 PM arrived. [...]
[...] She was still sitting down, and had indeed slid quite a ways down in the chair; with her feet up on the register, she was actually very nearly in a prone position as she spoke. [...]
[...] At times she was again in the prone position, which she achieved by sliding down in the wicker chair, and elevating her feet upon the register. [...]
[...] She had been very restless in her chair, ranging from an upright sitting position to a practically prone one.
[...] Some of them involve her pushing herself about in her chair.
Now: you are working very well together, and your suggestion about the use of the chair (to get around the house) was the result of Framework 2 creativity. [...]
[...] Physically used in such a manner, the chair does exercise his knees and feet, while his weight is not upon them entirely, and his thoughts are not on exercise.
Moving the chair backward some is also excellent, for it moves different ligaments than he normally uses. [...]
[...] It developed that she’s feeling more impatient, and really wants to be able to sit up — say in a lounge chair like the people from the infirmary mentioned. [...]
(I said I’ve been waiting for her legs to begin to move, so that she can move more, and get out of the bed into a chair of some sort, but since that hasn’t happened yet there isn’t much we can do. [...]